North Carolina
Related: About this forumFunding Shortfalls Hamper North Carolina's Program to Buy Out Hog Farms in or Near Floodplains
Now that hurricane season has arrived, hundreds of waste lagoons could be flooded by climate-amplified storms, threatening yards, drinking water wells, rivers, creeks and wetlands.
By Lisa Sorg
June 8, 2025
An industrialized swine farm in Wayne County, N.C., is covered in flood water during Hurricane Matthew in 2016. Credit: Rick Dove
As soon as the skies clear after a hurricane hits eastern North Carolina, Larry Baldwin climbs in the passenger seat of a single-engine plane, usually with his friend and pilot Rick Dove, and surveys the industrialized swine farms inundated with flood water.
Its almost indescribable. You look down and see that theyre either flooded or sides of a lagoonwe call them cesspoolsare completely blown out, said Baldwin, the Waterkeeper Alliances coordinator for Pure Farms Pure Waters, a nonprofit that advocates for stronger regulations over factory farms.
Meteorologists are predicting an above-average hurricane season, which began June 1. If a storm hits eastern North Carolina this year, flooding could jeopardize the structural integrity of hundreds of industrialized hog farms, whose massive open-air waste lagoons are vulnerable to hurricanes and heavy rain, an Inside Climate News analysis of publicly available flood maps and a state permit database shows.
As of March, there were 8.1 million hogs in North Carolina concentrated animal feeding operations*, also known as CAFOs.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/08062025/north-carolina-hog-farm-flood-program-funding/
*PDF Link to MARCH 2025 HOG REPORT

underpants
(190,996 posts)8.1 Million pigs in North Carolina
As you probably know, Smithfield Packing processes 30,000 pigs a day. Every day
Nothing gets wasted - theyd package the squeal if they could.
Bayard
(25,419 posts)In, "Crimes Against Nature." You know--back before the worms completely ate his brain.
OldBaldy1701E
(8,008 posts)Yet another industry that was destroyed by corporate takeover.
Yet, for some reason we want this... probably because of 'convenience'.
Or, the misdirection that it lowers prices... until one sees one's own area decimated by such operations. The cost is far more than the price of the product. They don't want us to notice that part, though.